After falling short in the Heisman Trophy race, Diego Pavia slammed the door on his way out.
The Vanderbilt quarterback sent a flagrant message to voters after Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza took home the prestigious award on Saturday night in New York City.
Reposting a photo of himself posing with a few of his Commodores’ teammates, Pavia stamped a harsh message to those who he believed snubbed him of the bronze hardware.
“F- all the voters, but family for life,” Pavia wrote, accompanied by a thumbs down emoji.
The 23-year-old signal caller finished in a distant second place to the overwhelming frontrunner Mendoza, who lifted the Hoosiers to a perfect 13–0 record, a Big Ten title and the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff.
Out of 930 ballots, Mendoza collected a total of 643 fi

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